Google's New Pixel Phone Beat Microsoft, Huawei In Early Sales

Google’s new Pixel phone got off to a solid start in its first few weeks on sale, according to new data.

The two models of the Pixel accounted for 0.5% of all U.S. phone sales for the three month period ending October 31, according to market research firm Kantar Insights. That doesn’t sound impressive, although it does tie the level of phone sales by Huawei and Microsoft.

But the Pixel phones weren’t available until October 20, meaning they reached the 0.5% level in 11 days, versus the three-month, or 92 day selling period for all the older phones on the market, explains Lauren Guenveur, director of global consumer insights at Kantar. Apple was the market leader, selling 41% of all new phones in the three months, Kantar reported.

Google, a unit of Alphabet (googl), introduced two models, the 5-inch Pixel and 5.5-inch Pixel XL, in October. Google fans have been attracted to the phones because they are the only ones to include the company’s new voice-driven digital assistant and are among the first to run on the Snapdragon 821 chip, the fastest processor from Qualcomm. The phones also include a highly-rated camera that some reviewers said rivals the camera in iPhone 7 Plus.

Due to an exclusive Pixel partnership with Verizon(vz), customers of AT&T(t), Sprint (s), and T-Mobile (tmus) couldn’t buy Pixel phones directly from their carriers and had to get the phone from Google or Best Buy.

The Pixel’s success may have been due to the substantial TV advertising budget for the phone during the launch period, Guenveur says. Google commercials ran during professional football games and other popular programming. The company spent over $3 million in the first two days of the campaign, and industry officials expected Google would shell out hundreds of millions of dollars in total. The company did not confirm the figure.

The 0.5% market share for Pixel over 11 days would equate to about 4% of the market over the entire three months. Still, there’s no guarantee that the Pixel phones will continue to sell briskly past the early attention of the launch period.

“We’ll have to wait and see,” says Guenveur, who wouldn’t offer a preview of Kantar’s upcoming surveys covering November or later.

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